âď¸âď¸âď¸ (3/5)
Green Knoll is a mixed bag. There are moments when you can really enjoy yourself out here, but there are also plenty of times where you feel like the course is punishing you just for showing up.
The positives: The views across the course are genuinely nice â lots of tree lines and open stretches that make for a pleasant walk or ride. The staff is generally friendly and helpful, and check-in is quick and painless. The fairways are in decent shape, and the greens are very well maintained. When youâre putting, the roll is smooth and true, which is a big plus compared to other county courses in the area.
But hereâs the reality: The weekend rates are steep. $90 for 18 holes with a cart is a lot to pay for what you get here, especially when other local courses in the same price range provide better conditions and far more amenities. The front 9, in particular, is absolutely unforgiving off the tee. You have to be pinpoint accurate on nearly every hole â and if you arenât, youâll find yourself scrambling just to save bogey. Itâs less âchallengingâ and more âdemoralizingâ at times.
The clearest example of this is Hole 8. On the scorecard itâs just 374 yards from the blues, which sounds manageable, but in reality itâs one of the least fun holes for the average golfer. Off the tee, youâve got woods pressed tight along the left and thick fescue swallowing up anything right. That leaves you with essentially two very narrow âislandsâ of fairway landing zones before the green, and you must find one of them or youâre basically done. Even a safe layup with a fairway wood or hybrid doesnât guarantee anything because youâre still staring at a long, difficult approach into a green that isnât welcoming. If you stray even a little, youâre in the so-called rough â which at Green Knoll plays more like dried-out concrete than grass. The hole demands perfection from start to finish and punishes you mercilessly for anything less. For a casual or mid-handicap golfer, it stops being a fair challenge and crosses into flat-out unenjoyable golf.
Course conditions follow the same theme. Fairways are playable, but the rough is consistently in awful shape. Both the first and second cut are dry, patchy, and extremely hard. The greens are in great shape, but theyâre lightning fast to the point of absurdity. A perfectly judged chip that lands softly can just as easily roll straight past the flag and sometimes off the green entirely. You feel like youâre getting punished for good shots, and that wears on you over 18 holes.
And then thereâs the amenities â or really, the complete lack of them. For almost $90, youâd expect at least the basics: a decent clubhouse, a grill or snack bar, maybe a beverage cart making the rounds. Instead, Green Knoll has literally zero amenities outside of a bathroom and a tiny pro shop thatâs basically a double-wide trailer. Thereâs no food. No drinks. No cart service. Not even a vending machine. Just a water fountain if you happened to bring your own bottle. For a county course charging premium weekend prices, this setup feels unacceptable. You donât get the experience or service that matches what youâre paying for, and that leaves a bad taste.
Overall: Green Knoll has some positives â nice views, friendly staff, easy check-in, and smooth greens â but itâs overpriced, has a punishing and sometimes unfair front 9 (especially Hole 8 with woods left, fescue right, and tiny landing zones), and the rough is in such poor shape that it makes recovery shots miserable. Add in lightning-fast greens and the fact that youâre paying nearly $100 for a course with literally no amenities beyond a trailer pro shop and a bathroom, and itâs not a course Iâd rush back to. Worth trying once if youâre local, but itâs hard to justify making it...
   Read moreChose to give this golf course a try a few Sundays ago, and had a horrible experience.
The course played fine, but my friends and I were harassed throughout our round. We were spoken to in a condescending manner urging us to keep up the pace, and when we did decide to skip the green on an entire hole for what we perceived to be a delay on our behalf we found that the group in front of us weren't even beginning off the tee.
What further drives home our mistreatment was this group confirming with us that they hadn't received any similar nudge or warning about their pace of play.
There were assumptions that we did not play the game, that we should instead go to a beginners course, and that we should be wary of being in others way. Unfortunately, there was one distinct difference between us and other players on that Sunday.
Myself and my group of friends are all African American. We responded to this with the utmost respect, but this type of treatment certainly will not be forgotten and has been well circulated.
Will never give this course...
   Read moreCame here to play the "pitch and putt" course; it's 9 holes, all par 3, ranging from 48-98 yards (95,48,75,98,75,50,58,68,87). You tee off from an astroturf mat, and there's no fairway, just natural rough. Very little hazards other than some thick brush on the course boundaries. Greens are flat and fast. I was able to play 9 holes in 45 minutes, and that's with a bunch of mulligans. It felt sort of like playing in someone's backyard. It was nice to see clover and honey bees instead of a sterile regular course.
It was extremely hot (mid 90s) when I played around noon and there's no shade. The bugs were pretty awful (gnats) so bring sunscreen and bug spray or a head net.
Totally worth $10 if you want a quick game and don't have the patience and/or skill to play a...
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